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Contra Costa County Climate Leaders: Development of a Residential Energy Conservation Ordinance (RECO) July 1, 2010 From a Presentation Prepared for the City of Hayward Sustainability Committee by Gabel Associates, LLC 0
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AB 32 Goals By 2020, GHGs to be at 1990 levels, and by 2050, 80% below 1990 levels Residential building sector is responsible for 14% of GHG emissions Meeting AB 32: Cost-Effective Green House Gas Reductions in the Residential Sector (by Consol for the California Homebuilding Foundation, 8/08) From the 2007 Integrated Energy Policy Report, p. 6): “ Pursue legislation that would require energy audits and a cost ‐ effective level of efficiency improvements at the time of sale of a building.” 1
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Revelant RECO Issues Consider key issues and choices in developing and implementing a Hayward Residential Energy Conservation Ordinance (RECO) Understand the scope of work involved, focus on several of the important topics Topics: o Policy Context o Major issues affecting overall structure o Overall approach or direction the RECO may take o What kinds of research and analysis may be most useful in supporting the RECO development process 2
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Local Policy Context RECO as part of a local Climate Action Plan 3 Hayward Program Goals Phase 1 (2012 – 2017) – The goal of the first phase is to reduce electricity use by 1% and reduce natural gas use by 2.5% in participating single-unit homes. The goal is to get 12.5 % of residential units that were constructed before the City‘s Green Building Ordinance took effect to participate in the program by the end of the phase. (Page 158)
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State Policy Context California Energy Commission Goals California Long Term Energy Strategic Plan “Goal 2: Transform home improvement markets to apply whole-house energy solutions to existing homes.” 4 “To achieve both widespread and deep levels of energy efficiency throughout the existing housing stock will require local government leadership. Individual local governments can adopt residential energy conservation ordinances (RECOs) for energy ratings and possible improvements at the time of sale.”
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RECO Triggers Remodels (including Additions) o Generally defined as total cost of construction (e.g. $75,000) o Other conditions could be established o Clearly defined event: building permit o Used in most RECOs o RECO Cost is usually considered reasonable vs. other expenditures 5
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RECO Triggers (continued) Point of Sale o Seller completes required measures prior to sale; or o Buyer completes required measures within “x” months of sale (e.g., 12 months or 24 months) o Clearly defined event: transfer of ownership o Used in a few RECOs including the City of Berkeley o Cost may be considered reasonable vs. other costs associated with the sale and some remodeling by buyer o Resistance by the real estate industry Market Penetration o Berkeley estimates Remodels and Point of Sale triggers combined will reach 20% of single family homes in the next ten years 6
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RECO Triggers (continued) Date Certain o All dwelling units must have required measures installed by a fixed date (e.g., 2020) o Much greater RECO impact on existing construction; however, o No clear administrative or procedural event: City must track down all building owners to inform, monitor and enforce o No model of it yet implemented in a current RECO o A large % of home owners may delay until fixed date o Real estate industry might not oppose this approach Market Penetration o A Date Certain trigger might achieve a 75% to 85% compliance rate 7
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RECO Trigger Implications: Hayward Example Remodels (including Additions) o Estimated 200 permits per year over 500 square feet = 1,000 units over 5 years Point of Sale o Approximately 1,200 home sales per year = 6,000 homes over 5 years Date Certain o 27,801 single family units = 75% compliance would equal 20,850 single family units by end date 2020 Goal from CAP o 12.5% of residential units = 3,475 single family units 8
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Housing Unit Age: Example
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Retrofit Measures: Building Performance Testing Building science research has shown that building performance testing is the key to achieving energy savings in existing and new buildings Courtesy of Rick Chitwood, 2010 CABEC Annual Conference -- Test equipment started becoming available in 1985 Now we have the ability to evaluate true installed performance of residential energy features As each feature is evaluated, large opportunities for improvement are found Large energy savings (e.g., up to 50%) are achievable Improvements in comfort, indoor air quality (IAQ), durability, moisture infiltration and health & safety 10
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Retrofit Measures: Air Sealing Courtesy of Rick Chitwood, 2010 CABEC Annual Conference 11 Continuous and air tight ceiling air barrier Insulation in contact with the air barrier No gaps or voids; no compression Ceiling insulation performance is dependent on a continuous air barrier Even 1.5% area thermal bridging can cut R-30 to R-15
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Retrofit Measures: Fire Safety 12 Courtesy of Rick Chitwood, 2010 CABEC Annual Conference Fire Safety and Air Infiltration is dependent on an air tight fire stop Fire stop also provides a continuous air barrier
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Retrofit Measures: Reduced Duct Leakage From a 2001 paper by John A. Bryant, Ph.D., P.E. from Texas A&M University: First International Conference for Enhanced Building Operations -- 13
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Test Equipment for QA: Installation & Verification Current field tools for installing contractors, building performance contractors, third party diagnostic testing: Blower door testing equipment to find and fix specific leaks; and measure the overall tightness of the whole building envelope 14
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Test Equipment for QA: Installation & Verification Infrared cameras used to find thermal bridging from air leakage and/or insulation flaws 15
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Test Equipment for QA: Installation & Verification Duct testing equipment to find leaks in the ducts and measure the overall leakage of the system 16
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Prescriptive List of Example Retrofit Measures Basic Prescriptive o Air sealing o Attic insulation (quality installation) o Duct testing and sealing o Insulation of water heater and pipes o Combustion safety and CO alarm Loading order: must do air sealing before insulating Other Recommended Measures (optional) o Low flow faucet aerators, shower heads, toilets o New distribution (duct) system o New heating equipment o New water heater o Floor insulation 17
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Performance Options California Whole House Energy Rating System (HERS Phase II) o HERS II pre-inspection and analysis by a HERS II Rater o Standard or customized report recommending cost-effective measures to install o Cost: $600 to $1000 estimate for HERS II Rating only o Improvements and post-inspection verification may show, for example, a 20% increase in energy efficiency (PACE funding) o Eligibility for utility incentives and state tax credits GreenPoint Rated for Existing Homes (GPR-EH) o Uses HERS II metrics, pre- and post-alteration inspections o Cost: $1500 estimate for pre- and post-alteration audit/testing U.S. HOME STAR Program (not yet passed and funded) o HOME STAR Gold requirements for federal tax credits o Building Performance Institute (BPI) accredited contractor 18
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Hayward RECO Development Time Line Talk by Panama Bartholomy, chief aide to California Energy Commission Chair Karen Douglas, 5/8/10 o Extreme “market confusion” right now because of so many new programs, administrative rules and technical requirements o Recommends that a local government considering a new RECO wait four to six months to make any final decisions o Concerned about working out the differences between federal (HOME STAR) and state (HERS II) programs Interview with Rick Chitwood, leading researcher and building performance contractor o Recommends working on key issues, but not deciding final local policies until there is a clearer picture of the new program criteria, rules, QA, availability of certified professionals 19
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Cost to Homeowners Based on list of measures o Low and high end costs for a typical Hayward home Based on additional measures o Low and high end costs for a typical Hayward home Must collect typical cost data from local building performance contractors (and other sources) Must consider cost of any audits, inspections and registering compliance with the City 20
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Cost Effectiveness and Additional Value What is the average annual energy savings? o Field data may be limited, especially in Climate Zone 3 o Case study energy model normalized to RASS data may be helpful even if not definitive Are the measures cost-effective? o During their useful life o Using the Property Assessment for Clean Energy (PACE) funding 20-year model Additional Benefits o Improved fire safety & combustion test as part of air sealing o Improved indoor air quality o Improved occupant comfort in winter and summer o External costs of climate change not included o Reduction of GHG in support of AB32 goals 21
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Status of Voluntary Programs for Credits/Incentives (HOME STAR, California HERS II Rating & Utility Programs) U.S. HOME STAR Program: Prescriptive (“Silver Star”) Path o Homeowner receives $1,000 to $1,500 for each measure installed by a certified installer up to $3,000 or 50% of total costs Performance (“Gold Star”) Path o Energy audit before work begins by a certified professional from BPI, RESNET or state-approved other o Test-out when retrofit is complete o Homeowner receives $3,000 for modeled savings > 20%; + $1,000 for each additional 5% savings Status: Not funded yet o Only a handful of BPI-accredited individuals in the state 22
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Status of Voluntary Programs for Credits/Incentives California Home Energy Rating System (HERS Phase II) for Existing and New Homes: Established by Public Resources Code 25942 o Goal: consistent, accurate and uniform rating based on a single statewide rating scale o Estimates of potential utility bill saving and recommendations on cost-effective measures to improve energy efficiency o Training and certification procedures for HERS II Raters for quality assurance and consumer protection o Labeling procedures: 2008 Title 24 home = 100; existing home > 100 (e.g., 180); Net Zero Energy home = 0 Status: Training/testing of HERS II Raters getting started o HERS II software still in beta version o Program not yet ready for prime time 23
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24 Example of Rating Homeowner Will Receive
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Status of Voluntary Programs for Credits/Incentives PG&E Residential Retrofit Incentive Program: Existing Rebates for individual measures o $150 for insulating > 1,000 sf attic o $100 for duct sealing o Other rebates for new HVAC, appliances, etc. o http://www.pge.com/myhome/saveenergymoney/rebates/ http://www.pge.com/myhome/saveenergymoney/rebates/ New Rebates for a package of prescriptive measures available in October, 2010 o $1,000 for air sealing, attic insulation and duct sealing Whole House Retrofits o Up to $3,500 for single family property owners o Pending approval by the California Energy Commission 25
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Consistency & Coordination of Voluntary Programs CA HERCC (California Home Energy Retrofit Coordinating Committee) o Ad hoc group 90+ energy efficiency & program development/implementation experts from many agencies/groups o Developing program implementation recommendations, conducting workshops and creating training and educational materials to support the advancement of Home Energy Efficiency Retrofitting of existing homes in California o April 26, 2010 latest draft of Recommended Technical Specifications for Proposed Eligible Measures o Status: Progress being made on resolving differences or ambiguities in federal, state, utility and Berkeley RECO requirements and installation criteria; but these issues not yet resolved 26
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Proposed Berkeley RECO (Tentative) Major remodels and point-of-sale triggers (unchanged) Mandatory Measures; and, o Furnace duct repair (duct sealing visually without testing) o Toilets, showerheads and aerators o Water piping insulation o Door weather-stripping o Fireplace closures o Multi-unit only: high efficiency common area lighting Owner picks one of two compliance paths 1.Home Energy Rating & Audit (HERS II) Report; or, 2.Basic Verified Retrofit Package 27
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Proposed Berkeley RECO (Tentative) HERS II Rating & Report; or, o Rating Certificate o Field Audit with data collection and diagnostics o Energy consumption analysis o Existing energy efficiency features o Recommendations for energy efficiency improvement Basic Verified Retrofit Package o Air sealing to State and Federal blower door standards o R-38 attic insulation o Combustion safety test and CO alarm RECO Raters o HERS II Raters or BPI Certified Installers Estimated Cost o $800 to $1,200 single family; $100 to $500 multi-family 28
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Administrative Plan Long Term Staffing o Detailed plan o How to cover additional cost o Department(s) responsible o Job descriptions Implementation, outreach and education o Web site o Staff to work directly with property owners Tracking, monitoring compliance, enforcement 29
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Quality Assurance (QA) Who is eligible to perform the work? o Licensed/certified contractors o Certified building performance contractors (e.g., BPI certified) Who is eligible to inspect the work? o Building department inspectors only o Licensed/certified third party inspectors Related questions o Will work (measures) completed prior to the effective date of the ordinance be considered acceptable? 30
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Questions? 31 From a Presentation Prepared for the City of Hayward Sustainability Committee by Gabel Associates, LLC Mike Gabel mike@gabelenergy.com
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April 2010 report Master Public Policy at Mills College Kali Steele 32
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April 2010 report Master Public Policy at Mills College Kali Steele steelekali@gmail.com Questions? 33
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Case Study Examples & Peer to Peer Discussion Time….. 34
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Wrap Up... 35 info@cccclimateleaders.org All Workshop Materials will be posted to our website www.cccclimateleaders.org Join us on Facebook!
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